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I'm trying to build a logical picture of what the maths says. Looking at the maths itself won't help because I can't build a logical picture from that. I don't think there's a logically consistent way of picturing what you're describing.DaleSpam said:Largely because you refuse to even attempt to learn the math which expresses all of these concepts in a single coherent, logical, and rigorous framework. Your anti-math prejudice is preventing you from learning, so there is little anyone else is going to be able to do for you here.
WannabeNewton's explanation in Schwarzschild coordinates goes along with my earlier explanation to you for the same in Rindler coordinates. It is all there. But you won't even make an effort. Each time you receive an answer you close your eyes and mind and look away and go back to claiming that you have not received an answer.
Answer me this. How can you reasonably expect anyone to be able to present a logical picture to you if you refuse to look at the math which expresses the logic when it is presented to you?
This is a definite yes/no situation that can't be Lorentzed away. The instant that object reaches the event horizon it causes a paradox. Then there's the fact that no object can cross until you do and then everything crosses at the same time. And the front of an object won't be able to reach the horizon before the back of it, even on the sub-atomic scale.DaveC426913 said:Where exactly is the contradiction?
The same event happens, it just happens at two different times depending on the observer's FoR.
It's identical to a scenario in SR where one observer is traveling at, for all intents and purposes, c. While a split second passes for him before his dropped spoon hits the deck of his rocketship, to an external observer, the entire universe ages and dies before the spoon hits the deck.
Same event two different timescales.
Explicitly, where is the contradiction?
From one frame of reference, sure. From another it takes split second. Why is this so difficult?
They never reach the horizon from the outside.PeterDonis said:And can you prove that they can always escape, without *assuming* that they can? Every argument you've offered has had a hidden assumption that's equivalent to your conclusion.
That's just another way of saying the object never reaches the horizon from the outside.PeterDonis said:They say different things because they're *about* different things. One is about how a hovering observer far away from the hole assigns space and time coordinates to events. The other is about how an observer free-falling into the hole assigns space and time coordinates to events. Neither of them is saying anything that contradicts the other. The first simply can't assign coordinates to events inside the horizon, while the second can. That's not a contradiction, just a limitation of the first observer's coordinates.
No. I'll do it before my next post. Schwarzschild spacetime? That says nothing can reach a horizon doesn't it? I'll have a look.PeterDonis said:Have you looked at a Kruskal chart or a Penrose diagram of Schwarzschild spacetime? Those are easy ways to visualize exactly what we've been saying. In fact, I've referred to them repeatedly in the other thread.